News & Observer | newsobserver.com |

Residents find many ways to serve the wider community

Published: Sun, Dec. 07, 2008 12:30AM

Modified Sun, Dec. 07, 2008 01:42AM

Bookmark and Share
email this story to a friend E-Mail print story Print
Text Size:

tool name

close
tool goes here

Chugging away at the core of Carol Woods retirement community's not-for-profit mission is a committee of active, dedicated residents who spend many hours learning, growing, and contributing to life inside and outside their community.

Each week, residents like Eugen and Anne Merzbacher depart from their cottage in the woods to lend a hand, and some trunk space, to picking up donated groceries from the South Estes Drive Harris Teeter and delivering them to the Inter-faith Council for Social Service drop-off center in Carrboro. There the groceries get sorted and distributed to needy families in Orange County.

Residents participate in and learn about volunteering opportunities and needs such as this one through the Community Relations Committee at Carol Woods.

The committee includes a group of residents interested in fostering and maintaining cooperative and responsible relationships between Carol Woods residents and their local, statewide, and global communities. It is chaired by Nancy Gustaveson, a resident, former teacher and active RSVP and Orange County volunteer.

Current committee members include Nancy Gustaveson, Louise Baker, Wynn Berg, Diane Brown, Gordon DeFriese, Norm Gustaveson, Martha Gwyn, Lois Ann Hobbs, and Eugen Merzbacher. Jack Chestnut, director of community contacts, and Jacqueline Allen, CCRC representative, are liaisons to the committee. This group of volunteers, organizers, and activists meets monthly to learn more about community needs and to coordinate volunteer outreach and connections.

The Community Relations Committee serves as an entry point for the outside community to inform and involve Carol Woods' residents in the greater community. From here, willing volunteers connect with information and opportunities and get to work.

The committee is also an avenue through which new residents can find projects to engage in and places to contribute their skills after they've settled into the community.

Carol Woods' resident volunteers have maintained commitments and partnerships with many local organizations and institutions for more than 20 years and continue to enjoy the relationships today.

Longstanding commitments relating to UNC were initiated early, such as the UNC-TV telethon and the university-sponsored Great Decisions program, an outreach program of the Foreign Policy Association. A very successful team was formed when Carol Woods residents partnered with UNC's Mobile Student Health Action Coalition (now called Beyond Clinic Walls). This program typically serves older adults in the community who have complex medical and social needs and who are often isolated from family and friends.

The Community Relations Committee began around 1980 and was formed by the Resident's Association. Volunteers from Carol Woods are continuously spending time volunteering and brainstorming ways to give back to the community.

The RSVP 55+ Program of Orange County is a popular avenue through which Carol Woods residents choose to volunteer. Through many different opportunities, resident Charles Paddock has logged more than 8,500 hours since 1987, and continues to add to this total each year. Paddock has spent years donating his time to organizations such as VITA (Volunteer Income Tax Assistance, an IRS program where he helps prepare taxes), Meals on Wheels delivering food with his wife Janet, and SHIIP (Seniors Help Insurance Information Program).

While retirement is typically thought of in terms of vacations and leisure time, Carol Woods' residents willingly spend many of their weekdays and weekends traveling to homeless shelters, the hospital, or the local AIDS House, as well as many other locations where their skills and help can be utilized.

Get it all with convenient home delivery of The News & Observer.

No comments have been posted for this story. Log in to be the first to comment.
 

 

The News & Observer is pleased to be able to offer its users the opportunity to make comments and hold conversations online. However, the interactive nature of the internet makes it impracticable for our staff to monitor each and every posting.

Since The News & Observer does not control user submitted statements, we cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted on our website. In addition, we remind anyone interested in making an online comment that responsibility for statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not The News and Observer.

If you find a comment offensive, clicking on the exclamation icon will flag the comment for review by the administrators, we are counting on the good judgment of all our readers to help us.